The 20 Most Common
Student Errors
In 1993, Robert
Connors and Andrea Lunsford published their results after studying
the most common errors marked on 21,000 student essays. Generally,
teachers consider syntactic or
sentence-level errors (sentence fragments, fused
sentences, comma splices) more serious than word-level
errors (spelling, verb forms, agreement). The list below
is ordered with most frequent errors first.
- Missing comma after an introductory element
- Vague pronoun reference
- Missing comma in a compound sentence
- Wrong word
- Missing comma(s) after a nonrestrictive element
- Wrong or missing verb ending
- Wrong or missing preposition
- Comma splice
- Missing or misplaced possessive apostrophe
- Unnecessary shift in tense
- Unnecessary shift in pronoun
- Sentence fragment
- Wrong tense or verb form
- Lack of agreement between subject and verb
- Missing comma in a series
- Lack of agreement between pronoun and antecedent
- Unnecessary comma(s) with a restrictive element
- Fused sentence
- Dangling or misplaced modifier
- Its/it's confusion
Connors, Robert J., and
Andrea Lunsford. "Teachers' Rhetorical Comments on Student Papers." CCC
44 (1993): 200-23.